US sportscaster.
She was Miss America (1971), the First Lady of Kentucky, and America's pioneer female sportscaster.

Crafts make us feel rooted, give us a sense of belonging and connect us with our history. Our ancestors used to create these crafts out of necessity, and now we do them for fun, to make money and to express ourselves.

Life is what you make it: If you snooze, you lose; and if you snore, you lose more.

The most popular labor-saving device is still money.

There's a fine line between being sweet and innocent and being a tough broad.

It doesn't seem too unusual to have a live hermit crab here in Atlantic City, but when you think I brought it all the way from Texas, it's unusual.

Published Sources for
the above Quotations:

F:

"JANGLE.com talks with Phyllis George about crafting;" found at http://www.jangle.com/articles/hia99-pgeorge.htm

R:

The Washington Post quoted by Tom Shales

A:

In "The Last Word - A Treasury of Women's Quotes," by Carolyn Warner, 1992.

N:

In "An Uncommon Scold," by Abby Adams, 1989.

K:

During her Miss America question period with Bert Parks, 1971; found at http://pressplus.com/missam/pw_1971.html